AI Article Synopsis

  • Squamous cell carcinoma (SCC) is a type of skin cancer that happens more often in people with a condition called Xeroderma Pigmentosum (XP), which makes it hard for them to repair UV damage from the sun.
  • In horses, SCC is the most common eye cancer, and a specific gene mutation (DDB2-T338M) in some horse breeds is linked to this cancer because it affects how their bodies repair UV damage.
  • This study shows that the DDB2-T338M mutation makes it difficult for the protein to connect to damaged DNA and affects the horse’s ability to fix its DNA, similar to problems found in people with XP.

Article Abstract

Squamous cell carcinoma (SCC) occurs frequently in the human Xeroderma Pigmentosum (XP) syndrome and is characterized by deficient UV-damage repair. SCC is the most common equine ocular cancer and the only associated genetic risk factor is a UV-damage repair protein. Specifically, a missense mutation in horse DDB2 (T338M) was strongly associated with both limbal SCC and third eyelid SCC in three breeds of horses (Halflinger, Belgian, and Rocky Mountain Horses) and was hypothesized to impair binding to UV-damaged DNA. Here, we investigate DDB2-T338M mutant's capacity to recognize UV lesions in vitro and in vivo, together with human XP mutants DDB2-R273H and -K244E. We show that the recombinant DDB2-T338M assembles with DDB1, but fails to show any detectable binding to DNA substrates with or without UV lesions, due to a potential structural disruption of the rigid DNA recognition β-loop. Consistently, we demonstrate that the cellular DDB2-T338M is defective in its recruitment to focally radiated DNA damages, and in its access to chromatin. Thus, we provide direct functional evidence indicating the DDB2-T338M recapitulates molecular defects of human XP mutants, and is the causal loss-of-function allele that gives rise to equine ocular SCCs. Our findings shed new light on the mechanism of DNA recognition by UV-DDB and on the initiation of ocular malignancy.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8080515PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.dnarep.2020.103022DOI Listing

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